1st Edition

Hume's Philosophy Of The Self

By Tony Pitson Copyright 2002
    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 2002. Personal identity lies at the very heart of Hume’s philosophy but has received surprisingly limited attention. Hume’s Philosophy of the Self is the first book to go beyond the famous section of the Treatise, ‘Of Personal Identity’, and explore the fundamental concern with the Self that pervades all of Hume’s work. A. E. Pitson argues innovatively that this concern rests on a crucial distinction between two aspects of personal identity: our thought and our passions. Hume’s Philosophy of the Self addresses issues fundamental to the study of eighteenth-century thought, the Scottish Enlightenment and naturalism, and offers an essential new perspective on Hume’s moral philosophy, epistemology and philosophy of mind.

    Chapter Introduction; Part I The mental aspects of personal identity; Chapter 1 The self and human nature; Chapter 2 Hume and the idea of self; Chapter 3 Hume on the mind/body relation; Chapter 4 Hume's second thoughts about personal identity; Part II The agency aspect of personal identity; Chapter 5 Hume on character and the self; Chapter 6 Human and animal nature; Chapter 7 Hume and agency; Chapter 8 Hume and other minds;

    Biography

    A. E. Pitson is Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Stirling.